I did try the '-t'  option and either the same message came back or I would
sometimes get a "usage" message back and it would run through all of the
commands and what they mean.

The computer I am using Ubuntu on and the camera are directly wired into
the same Internet router. I gave you the external Internet ip address so
you could access the camera. If you open up the stream in a media player it
is a basketball facility. I also gave you the external address because in
the future I will be using this program to hopefully connect to other
devices on other networks so I'm making sure the external ip address will
work.

I currently live stream events from this camera and don't have a problem
with that.
On Apr 23, 2015 5:38 PM, "Ross Finlayson" <[email protected]> wrote:

> I tried these and the files do go into the folder I specified them to. I
> have a folder named "record" and the output files go in, only one of them,
> and it is empty.
>
>
> If you use the “-P 60” option, then the files should end up in the
> directory that you’re in when you ran “openRTSP”.
>
>
> So you may be right with the firewall.
>
>
> Did you also try adding the “-t” option?
>
>
>
> Do you have any idea where I would remove these firewalls?
>
>
> You need to talk to your Internet Provider, and/or the Internet Provider
> of the network where your server (camera) is located.
>
> Ross Finlayson
> Live Networks, Inc.
> http://www.live555.com/
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> live-devel mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.live555.com/mailman/listinfo/live-devel
>
>
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